Periagoge
Concept
1 min read

Sacred Embodiment—Grief Lived Through the Body

Honoring grief and anger as experiences to be danced, moved, and felt somatically rather than transcended or abstracted.

Mira
Why It Matters

Mirabai's practice was not intellectual but embodied: she danced, she sang, she moved through the temple with her whole being. Bhakti rejects the notion that spirituality means escaping the body or transcending emotion. Instead, it sanctifies the body as the primary vehicle for meeting the divine. Grief and rage live in the body—as tightness, trembling, numbness, explosive heat. Rather than treating these sensations as obstacles, sacred embodiment asks us to welcome them as teachers. Where does your anger live? What happens if you breathe into it? Move with it? Dance it? What emerges when you stop trying to spiritually transcend the very real physical reality of your pain? This framework opposes the bypass culture that treats emotions as problems to solve rather than experiences to integrate. For those working with grief's rage, sacred embodiment invites reconnection: What does your anger need your body to do? How can moving somatically—rather than thinking your way out—create integration and presence? Your body is not the obstacle; it is the path.

Helpful guides
Mira
Love & Relationships
Peri
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